German Idealism
Group: 4 #group-4
Relations
- Transcendental Idealism: Transcendental idealism was a key concept in German Idealism
- Reason: Reason and rational knowledge were central concerns for the German Idealists
- The Phenomenology of Spirit: Hegel’s Phenomenology was a seminal text of German Idealism
- Phenomenology: Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit was a major work of German Idealism
- Friedrich Schelling: Schelling’s philosophy of nature and identity influenced German Idealism
- Immanuel Kant: Kant’s transcendental idealism laid the groundwork for German Idealism
- Subjectivity: The role of the subject in constituting reality was explored by German Idealists
- Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel: Hegel’s absolute idealism was the culmination of German Idealism
- Transcendental Idealism: Influenced the development of
- Absolute Idealism: Hegel’s system of absolute idealism was central to German Idealism
- Transcendental Philosophy: Transcendental philosophy was highly influential on later German idealists like Fichte and Hegel.
- Critique of Pure Reason: Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason was highly influential for German Idealism
- Absolute Knowledge: The possibility of absolute knowledge was a key issue for German Idealists
- Idealist Metaphysics: The German Idealists developed new metaphysical systems based on idealism
- Johann Gottlieb Fichte: Fichte developed Kant’s ideas into a ‘Wissenschaftslehre’ or doctrine of science
- Romanticism: There were connections between German Idealism and the Romantic movement
- Dialectics: The dialectical method was a key part of Hegel’s idealist philosophy
- Transcendental Philosophy: Kant’s transcendental philosophy was a major influence on the development of German Idealism, which included philosophers such as Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel.